Wednesday, February 18, 2026

"Is Not This the Fast That I Choose?"

Ash Wednesday

Isaiah 58.1-12; Matthew 6.1-6, 16-21

St. Gregory’s, Long Beach

 

As we begin our Lenten journey, we once again hear the standard Gospel reading for Ash Wednesday: Jesus’ commentary regarding three common spiritual practices. The three—almsgiving, prayer, and fasting—forming the foundation for righteous living in the Jewish tradition. Three practices which likewise form the foundation for righteous living in our own Christian tradition. These three practices forming the foundation, the structure, which many Christians identify with the season of Lent. Practices we intentionally engage in during the six-week penitential season of preparation for Easter. Emphasis on the word “penitential.”

 

Before we go too much farther, it is probably prudent to define our terms, just so we are all on the same page. What do we mean when we talk about almsgiving, prayer, and fasting?

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Sunday, February 15, 2026

"Lord, It Is Good For Us To Be Here"

Last Sunday after the Epiphany (Year A)

Matthew 17.1-9

St. Gregory’s, Long Beach

 

Today we stand at a critical turning point, in more ways than one. As we metaphorically stand on the mountaintop with Jesus, Peter, James, John, Moses, and Elijah, we witness a turning point in the life and ministry of Jesus. The point where things take a radical, and for Peter, James, and John, an unexpected turn into the unknown. From the day-to-day work of teaching, preaching, and healing, turning toward Jerusalem and the culmination of Jesus’ life, his public ministry, and to a new life for him and for all. And for us, two millennia later, this is a turning point in our liturgical calendar, as we end the season after Epiphany and turn toward Lent. As we wrap up our look at how Jesus is manifest and revealed as the Son of the Living God, and begin preparation for Easter and the ultimate revelation of who Jesus is and who we are in the new light of Easter morning.

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Sunday, February 08, 2026

The Blessing of Salt and Light

Fifth Sunday after the Epiphany (Year A)

Matthew 5.13-20

St. Gregory’s, Long Beach

 

Last week we heard the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount—Jesus’ inaugural sermon, and one in which he essentially lays out his vision for his ministry, as well as some of the central teachings that will guide that ministry. Or, more accurately, teachings that will guide those who seek to follow him, those who will engage in ministry with him. In the portion we heard last Sunday, the Beatitudes, Jesus talks about being blessed. Through the Beatitudes, he presents a confounding and counterintuitive assessment of what it means to be blessed. He makes a statement about who is already blessed, not a proclamation of how to get and keep God’s blessing, be it for ourselves or for others. On the contrary, Jesus is saying the most important thing about divine blessing is that it already is. It has been graciously given. And not just in those places and circumstances we would expect. It is also given—it is especially given—in those places and circumstances that may seem to us far from being blessed. That we receive blessing as pure gift, not as something to be earned, not as a reward for good behavior or right action. As pure gift.

 

In redefining blessing and blessedness, Jesus is proclaiming that no matter who we are, we are blessed by God—even if we don’t always feel it. The Beatitudes are meant to be words of comfort, consolation, and encouragement to all of us. And that in being blessed, we are assured that the kingdom of heaven is already open to us and that we are a part of it. As such, we are invested in the work of that kingdom.

 

Which brings us to today’s portion of the Sermon on the Mount. Before Jesus launches into the remainder of the sermon with teachings on a variety of topics, today he provides several images of encouragement as to what it means to be blessed, to be part of the kingdom of God, to be invested in the work of the kingdom, to actually engage in that work. All leading up to, being preparation for, the more practical instructions of what that work entails. Making more explicit the scope of what it means to be blessed. Of how one lives into and out of the blessedness bestowed on us by God. Jesus primarily does this through two images: “You are the salt of the earth” and “You are the light of the world.”

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Sunday, February 01, 2026

But First, Blessing

Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany (Year A)

Matthew 5.1-12

St. Gregory’s, Long Beach

 

Today we gather our parish family in preparation for our Annual Meeting. While there are certain pieces of business that need to be conducted at the Annual Meeting—electing new Vestry members, electing delegates to Diocesan Convention, and presenting the budget for the new year—the Annual Meeting really is first and foremost a celebration of our common life. A celebration of the work that we have chosen to enter into and engage together as the Body of Christ in this place at this time. One of the ways we do this is by sharing reports—written and verbal—from our parish leaders and from our various ministries. Not as a way of boasting about what we have done, of congratulating ourselves on what great people we are, but as a way of honoring and celebrating how we have used the resources God has entrusted to us as one small way in which the Kingdom of God is being built, one brick at a time, one life at a time.

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